Genetic Compensation in a Human Genomic DisorderBrief Report

Cytogenetic studies of the parents of a girl with the DiGeorge (or velocardiofacial) syndrome, who carried a deletion at 22q11.2, revealed an unexpected rearrangement of both 22q11.2 regions in the unaffected father. He carried a 22q11.2 deletion on one copy of chromosome 22 and a reciprocal 22q11.2...

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Veröffentlicht in:The New England journal of medicine 2009-03, Vol.360 (12), p.1211
Hauptverfasser: Carelle-Calmels, Nadège, Saugier-Veber, Pascale, Girard-Lemaire, Françoise, Rudolf, Gabrielle, Doray, Bérénice, Guérin, Eric, Kuhn, Pierre, Arrivé, Mathilde, Gilch, Catherine, Schmitt, Evelyne, Fehrenbach, Séverine, Schnebelen, Albert, Frébourg, Thierry, Flori, Elisabeth
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cytogenetic studies of the parents of a girl with the DiGeorge (or velocardiofacial) syndrome, who carried a deletion at 22q11.2, revealed an unexpected rearrangement of both 22q11.2 regions in the unaffected father. He carried a 22q11.2 deletion on one copy of chromosome 22 and a reciprocal 22q11.2 duplication on the other copy of chromosome 22. Genetic compensation, which is consistent with the normal phenotype of the father, was shown through quantitative-expression analyses of genes located within the genetic region associated with the DiGeorge syndrome. This finding has implications for genetic counseling and represents a case of genetic compensation in a human genomic disorder.
ISSN:0028-4793
1533-4406
DOI:10.1056/NEJMoa0806544